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Chambers Of Commerce Battle Over Climate Change
Ready for a debate?
Wow! Enviro-author Jonathan Hiskes throws down the gauntlet in this column detailing the enviro-rift forming between the International and U.S. Chambers of Commerce. The U.S. Chamber's very un-green climate policy created quite the hullabaloo last year when the CoC asked for changes to the Waxman-Markey Energy bill. Or, as another Grist writer, David Roberts, so succinctly put it: The CoC wants to “balance environmental objectives with the need for economic growth and job creation†by lowering targets, increasing free allocations, ditching the renewable energy standard, waiting for China and India to act first, completely preempting state programs, and increasing subsidies to fossil-fuel companies.â€
That hullabaloo thickened into a Category-5 public relations nightmare by May. 30 corporations and CoC members, including Johnson & Johnson and Nike, asked the Chamber to refrain from making climate-change statements that didn't reflect members' viewpoints. In fact, only four of the Chamber's 123 business board members have publicly questioned the scientific consensus on climate change and reject the need for federal regulation to reduce global warming pollution. As Roberts notes, “Many, many business see enormous opportunities in the shift to clean energy. Many businesses want the stability and predictability ACES would bring. And many of those businesses happen to be members of the CoC.†Now, the International Chamber of Commerce is distancing their organization from our stateside CoC–and the climate change debate is once again to blame. Indeed, local chambers from Indiana to Boulder to Miami are hosting events on climate change and green jobs.
Do you believe that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce should change their stance on climate change? If so, what changes are needed?
Read the article from Grist here.
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